Mon May 12, 2008 6:55PM EDT
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With concern over the end of the road for Windows XP reaches feverish levels, Microsoft appears to be altering yet again its timeline for killing off the popular operating system, which would ultimately force people into upgrading to Vista.
The latest news comes from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, reacting to criticism at a recent news conference, who said "XP will hit an end-of-life. We have announced one. If customer feedback varies, we can always wake up smarter, but right now, we have a plan for end-of-life for new XP shipments."
As of now the June 30 deadline stands, but PC makers may be encouraging Microsoft to get "smarter" by taking the rare step of openly combating Microsoft's direction that vendors move from XP to Vista. HP, Dell, and Lenovo have all said they will downgrade operating systems on new machines from Vista to XP at customer request and will continue to do so until 2009 (specific ending dates vary).
Note that no one's breaking the law here. Legally, anyone with a volume license or an OEM license for Vista can downgrade to XP without having to pay extra for the OS. The only exception is for those who purchased "full packaged product (FPP)" editions, which do not include downgrade rights, though Windows Vista Professional and Ultimate editions do. Whether XP drivers are available is another issue.
If asked, many companies will include an XP disc with your order, but Dell is installing XP at the factory as well. Cnet also offers some additional helpful advice on obtaining XP if you're buying a Vista machine.
My best advice is that if you're buying a new machine and want XP, get on the phone instead of using the company's website to configure the product. Salespeople can make options available, like downgrades, that you won't get online.
Of course, all of this could be moot in the next month or so if Microsoft bows to pressure from users to continue to sell XP. Stay tuned to see if Microsoft has a change of heart before the end of June.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Win3.1 was a flop and 95 got better but lots of errors 98se was stable for maybe 6 months at a time. no need to even mention ME.. by far win2000 was the best real improvment in 15 years of working with windows.. xp and vista are good but they just add a few improvments with no real major changes and are a little buggy the first year. maybe I will go to vista when they come out with sp2.
Yeah my sister bought a brand new dell laptop runniong Vista a couple months ago, and ever since she's been having major problems with it. One of them is just a sloooowww and laggy operation. Its insane, I personally love Xp, and Ive bene using the same machine for 2 years now without any problems.
I find that people that don't have a lot of computer experience can have the most problems with computers, regardless of the operating system. Here at my house we have 3 Windows XP machines, 1 Vista, 1 Ubuntu Linux, and 1 Mac OSX Leopard. I don't have problems with any of the machines. I think the best operating system for kids and low tech people is probably the mac. I think the best operating system for geeks is Ubuntu or another distro of Linux. I think the best operating system for working is Windows XP. Sometimes you have to try all of the operating systems available before you can start saying one or the other is better.
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286 Posted by angelino90004 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:54PM EDT Report Abuse
I guess keyboard commands don't matter to anybody but me. I hate using the mouse if at all possible. With Vista, you're forced to take you hand off the keyboard, look for the mouse, re-find the mouse on the display, click/drag or both, etc., every time you want to activiate the menu bar, move to the next cell of a form, etc. XP give me true plug and play along with tabbing through forms and keyboard shortcuts on nearly all snap-ins or applications. This probably only matters to less than .1% of all users, but Vista wastes lots of time and keystrokes for me.